Former two-weight world champion David Haye saw one of his boldest boxing predictions completely fall part within two days. Ahead of the high anticipated 2020 heavy rematch between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, Haye heavy backed the American to retain his WBC title. Having shared numeric sparring rounds with Wilder in the past, Haye inserted that the champion possessed an underrated chin and elite recovery powers. At the time, the take-seemed-reasonable; Wilder was undefeated and had famously dropped Fury twice in their controversial 2018 draw.
Speaking on BT Sport before the mega-fight at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Haye explainly told interviewer Richie Woodall that Wilder's punch resistance was heavy looked at. He claimed that the champion could take a massive shot and recover instantly. However, that specific argument was badly mismantled once the opening bell rang. Fury completely changed his tactical approach for the rematch; he ditched his passive style to become an aggressive, front-foot pressure fighter.
The British Challenger entered the ring significant heavier and physically bulied the American from the first round. Fury refused to let Wilder establish his rhythm or load his lethal right hand. He is very gentle on the champion in the lines and shore down. Fury scored a heavy knockdown in the third round and repeated the feat in the fifth frame. By the time the seventh round arrived, Wilder was bleeding from his ear and completely exhausted.
The one-sided suspension ended in the seventh round when Wilder's corner drew in the towel, forcing review Kenny Bayliss to stop the contest. At the time of the stoppage, ringside judges had Fury leading comfortable by a wide margin. The dominant performance striped away Wilder's long-standing aura of invincibility. While Wilder removed a dangerous single-punch knockout artist, his response for possession elite recovery powers take a permanent hit.
The heavy life followed the trauma of Wilder's career. He was not merely outboxed; he was systematically broken down by Fury's size, strength, and relative game plan. Haye's pre-fight assessment quickly become one of the most memorable failed predictions in modern boxing history. Twelve days prior to the bout, Wilder was widely feared as an unstoppable force. Twelve days later, Fury provided that even the hardest puncher could be fully domesticated.
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